Traditionally, the sourcing of prehistoric stone tools in Britain has been done most successfully by comparing the petrological and geochemical characteristics of individual stone tools with rock and debitage from known prehistoric quarry sites and stone tool production sites. However, this is a very rare occurrence because only a very small proportion of stone tools in Britain have a secure archaeological provenance, including those from prehistoric quarries or production sites. Substantial numbers of stone tools in the British archaeological record are chance finds; they lack a secure archaeological context. Through a case study of Carrock Fell and the Implement Petrology Group XXXIV, this article presents a new methodological and statist...
The use of geochemical analysis for characterization studies of archaeological material has been inc...
International audienceField sampling of lithic raw materials, whose protocol is already well develop...
Macroscopic examination of 24 lithic assemblages and microscopic analysis of assemblage waste flakes...
The first large scale regional provenance analysis of greenstone and diabase adzes in western Norway...
This thesis investigates the potential for the use of Portable X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometry (pXRF...
The doleritic bluestone monoliths at Stonehenge have long been known to have been sourced from the M...
During the Neolithic period amphibolite is a raw material that seems to have been highly regarded fo...
Because of the inexact nature of visual classification schemes and the resulting uncertainties of sp...
International audienceThis paper contributes to an understanding of the distances and choices involv...
Geochemical data obtained using field-portable non-destructive X-ray fluorescence instrumentation (P...
(IF N/A; Q1)International audienceAnalysing the colouring matter used to make prehistoric rock art i...
The Database of Implement Petrology for Britain contains records assembled by the Implement Petrolog...
Megalithic Stone 80 at Stonehenge, the so-called Altar Stone, is traditionally considered to be part...
The provenancing of flint artefacts has proved problematic in the past. Acid maceration to extract a...
The use of geochemical analysis for characterization studies of archaeological material has been inc...
International audienceField sampling of lithic raw materials, whose protocol is already well develop...
Macroscopic examination of 24 lithic assemblages and microscopic analysis of assemblage waste flakes...
The first large scale regional provenance analysis of greenstone and diabase adzes in western Norway...
This thesis investigates the potential for the use of Portable X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometry (pXRF...
The doleritic bluestone monoliths at Stonehenge have long been known to have been sourced from the M...
During the Neolithic period amphibolite is a raw material that seems to have been highly regarded fo...
Because of the inexact nature of visual classification schemes and the resulting uncertainties of sp...
International audienceThis paper contributes to an understanding of the distances and choices involv...
Geochemical data obtained using field-portable non-destructive X-ray fluorescence instrumentation (P...
(IF N/A; Q1)International audienceAnalysing the colouring matter used to make prehistoric rock art i...
The Database of Implement Petrology for Britain contains records assembled by the Implement Petrolog...
Megalithic Stone 80 at Stonehenge, the so-called Altar Stone, is traditionally considered to be part...
The provenancing of flint artefacts has proved problematic in the past. Acid maceration to extract a...
The use of geochemical analysis for characterization studies of archaeological material has been inc...
International audienceField sampling of lithic raw materials, whose protocol is already well develop...
Macroscopic examination of 24 lithic assemblages and microscopic analysis of assemblage waste flakes...